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The Inner Life of Catholic Reform offers a longue durée overview of the sentiments and spiritual ideas of the 250-year long time span from the ending of the Council of Trent to the Catholic Enlightenment, known as Catholic Reform.
List of contents
- Preface
- Chapter 1: The Dynamics of Reform
- Chapter 2: The Varying Theologies of the Priesthood
- Chapter 3: The Homily
- Chapter 4: Teaching the Faith in a Parish
- Chapter 5: The Spiritual Formation of the Family
- Chapter 6: Laymovements Transforming the Church
- Chapter 7: Eucharist and Confession
- Chapter 8: Transformation through Prayer
- Chapter 9: Symbols and Images
- Chapter 10: Mary and Joseph: Images of Hope
- Conclusion
- Bibliography of Primary Sources
- Bibliography of Secondary Sources
About the author
Ulrich L. Lehner is William K. Warren Professor of Theology at University of Notre Dame, Indiana. A member of the European Academy of Sciences and Arts, he has received awards and fellowships from the Princeton Institute for Advanced Study, the Notre Dame Institute of Advanced Study, the Earhart Foundation, the German Humboldt Foundation and the Carl Friedrich von Siemens Foundation. He is the award-winning author and editor of thirty books and scholarly works on early modern and modern history of religion.
Summary
In The Inner Life of Catholic Reform, Ulrich Lehner offers a longue durée overview of the sentiments and spiritual ideas of the 250-year long time span following the Council of Trent, known as Catholic Reform. While there have been many studies of the so-called Counter-Reformation, the political side of Catholic Reform, and of its institutional and social history, the sentiments, motivations and religious practices of Catholic Reform--what Lehner calls the "inner life"--have been mostly neglected.
Reform, Lehner argues, was not something that occurred merely through institutional changes, new laws, and social control. For early modern Catholics, church reform began with personal reform and attempts to live in a state of grace. Lehner seeks to take these religious commitments seriously and understand them on their own terms. The central question he asks is "What did Catholics do to obtain salvation, to make themselves pleasing to God?" Lehner examines how the spiritual ideas that emerged from attempts to wrestle with the question of the salvation of souls changed the Catholic view of the world.
Drawing on a plethora of published and unpublished sources and a wide array of secondary literature--with an emphasis on Europe, but integrating material from Africa, America, and Asia--Lehner documents this transformative period in history, when Catholicism became a "world religion."
Additional text
A provocative read for scholars of the topic, while a great introduction for those starting out on the study of early modern Catholicism.